"Northern Rock's troubles did not start here; they started in the US,
with the so-called "sub-prime" mortgage market. "Sub-prime" is a
euphemism. These are mortgages to people who are poor credit risks.
Banks made these loans then sold them on to other financial
institutions, which for whatever reasons did not understand the risks
involved. "


They *knew* the risks involved, as surely as the mortgage broker who
gave my previously discussed waitress a $300,000 loan and knew by
simple mathematics she wouldn't be able to 'make the nut' the first
time she needed to go to the doctor (without health insurance, I'm
sure...) for a common cold.

But pure blind greed IS blinding, and who heeds greed in the financial
world anyway?
It's just BAU (Business-As-Usual)... as usual as Enron floor brokers
joking about all the grannies that were going to go broke(or freeze)
because of their dealings...

The HORROR!

Shocked! Shocked! Who'd a thought market brokers of ALL STRIPES were
heartless prigs in a business that *requires* that behavior no matter
*what* the market.

We can all wait now for that same caliber of greed-heads in the oil
market to come clean and tell us that we've been relying on oil that
doesn't exist, and never did, to prop up our economy.


Independent UK
Panic on the streets of Britain: Northern rocked, City shocked
By Hamish McRae
Published:  15 September 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/business/comment/article2964436.ece

Yesterday something happened that I have not seen in my lifetime, a
run on a major British bank. There were queues outside Northern Rock
branches as depositors tried to get their money out.

This is the sort of event that happened in America after the Great
Crash of 1929. For Northern Rock, this is catastrophe. For the rest of
us it marks the end of an era of easy money.

This cheap money, which fuelled the housing and takeover of recent
years, was gradually drawing to a close as the Bank of England
increased interest rates. But for those who were prepared to pay the
going rate, getting a loan has remained easy enough. Now, with the
bail-out of Northern Rock by the Bank of England, it is going to be
rather more difficult.

Northern Rock, which has been doing one-fifth of the new home loans in
Britain, had to go to the Bank of England for emergency funding. There
is, we are assured by the Financial Services Authority, no problem
with the solvency of Northern Rock.

The Bank of England says that this is simply part of its job to supply
liquidity to financial institutions that are having temporary
problems. The Chancellor has approved the bail out.

If all these assurances are sound then there is no danger that
depositors will lose any money. But the fact remains Northern Rock's
reputation is shot. The company will presumably be taken over by a
larger and more secure rival.

This is not just a story about a run on one medium-sized British bank.
It is about the complexity and the possible fragility of the
international banking system. And it is a story about the excessive
credit that has been washing around the world, with banks throwing
money at borrowers without paying proper heed to the risks. Let's hope
it does not become a story of a more general economic slowdown.

Northern Rock's troubles did not start here; they started in the US,
with the so-called "sub-prime" mortgage market. "Sub-prime" is a
euphemism. These are mortgages to people who are poor credit risks.
Banks made these loans then sold them on to other financial
institutions, which for whatever reasons did not understand the risks
involved.

US house prices started to fall, borrowers defaulted and the price of
these loans collapsed. Some of the buyers were European banks and a
couple of regional German banks have already had to be rescued by
takeovers.

Northern Rock did not have these loans but the climate of fear
generated in the banking community by the collapse of this market led
to banks hoarding their cash. Better keep the money handy in case
something else went wrong. That was Northern Rock's downfall.

It has relatively few High Street branches and has expanded very fast.
It has relied on borrowing money from other banks to balance its
books. When that market started to dry up it was in trouble. The only
place it could be assured of funds was the Bank of England.

Why did Northern Rock not see this coming? Two reasons. One is that we
have not had a run on a bank in Britain since the fringe bank crisis
of the 1970s -- Barings went bust but that was rogue trading losses --
and few bankers are old enough to remember that far back.

And the other is that the links between different banks and what they
owe to each other have become so complicated that no one knows quite
where a problem on one side of the world will end up.

The second part of the story is the global lending spree. Interest
rates have been very low, in some countries below the rate of
inflation, for several years. So it made sense to borrow money that
was, in effect, free and stick it into property, hedge funds, private
equity, whatever. In addition huge savings have been building in China
and the Middle East and these too have been washing round the world
hunting for a home.

Here in Britain this has had two consequences. One is that asset
prices, particularly of prime property, have shot up; the other, that
lending terms, again particularly for property, became very lax. The
two fed off each other: if asset prices went up people did not mind
borrowing and banks were happy to lend against the security of the
assets. We have seen that in the credit cards pushed through people's
doors and mortgages for six times' salary, but that has been just the
tip of the iceberg, British examples of a global phenomenon.

One result has, in both Britain and to an even greater extent the US,
been a spending boom. In both countries retail sales have grown much
more swiftly than incomes, with people borrowing to cover the gap. We
still save a bit; American households do not, in aggregate, save at
all.

Slowly that is changing as saving comes back into fashion. Personal
consumption accounts for about 70 per cent of US demand, a bit less
here, and about 60 per cent on the Continent.

The question that follows is whether cutting back on spending will
lead to such a sharp cut back in overall demand that our economies go
into recession.

That is the final part of the story and we cannot know the outcome to
it yet. There are serious fears of recession in the US and there are
hopes that the US Federal Reserve will cut interest rates shortly in
an effort to boost the economy and avert it.

In Britain and the Continent those fears are more muted. Much will
depend on what happens in the various housing markets. In the US
prices are falling but in the UK, France and Spain (all of which have
had housing booms) the evidence is not at all clear. As to the future,
the experts as always are divided. Yesterday the financial markets
were in panic mode, marking down the prices of home lenders, building
companies, estate agents -- anything connected with property. Sterling
did badly, too.

But we know enough about markets to appreciate that once they have
digested the information they may well take a more sanguine view.
Let's not kid ourselves, though. A run on a bank in a developed
country is big stuff.

The longer these financial upheavals run, the greater the danger that
financial ructions will feed through into economic damage. On the
positive side the main "emerging" economies, China, India, Russia and
Brazil, are all growing strongly. If the US, or indeed the UK and
Continental economies falter, then there will be scope for trimming
interest rates. But there can be little doubt that the developed world
in general is moving into a more sober period.

It will be harder to get credit and more important to save - -- and
not, many will think, before time.

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